Glacial meltwater erosion of the Mid-Cheshire Ridge: Implications for ice dynamics during the Late Devensian glaciation of northwest England

Neil F. Glasser*, Gregory H. Sambrook Smith

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Mapping of glacial meltwater channels along the length of the 25-km Mid-Cheshire Ridge reveals evidence for four distinctive channel morphologies, which are used to establish the pattern of meltwater flow during the Late Devensian glaciation. A key characteristic of all channels is an abrupt change in morphology between inception on the Mid-Cheshire Ridge and the downstream continuation on the surrounding Cheshire Plain, with large reductions in channel cross-sectional area at this point. The interpretation of this evidence is that meltwater flowing off the bedrock ridge was absorbed into a layer of permeable sediment beneath the Late Devensian ice sheet. This permeable sediment is significant because it would have acted as a deforming layer beneath the former ice sheet in this area. Reconstruction of the Late Devensian ice sheet based on information from the meltwater channels and using values of shear stresses typical of ice sheets resting on deformable beds (ca. 20 kPa) suggests an ice surface elevation over the Irish Sea of ca. 700 m. This value is considerably less than previous estimates of the vertical extent of the ice sheet of ca. 1000-1200 m and has important implications for the rapidity and mode of deglaciation during the Late Devensian.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)703-710
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Quaternary Science
Volume14
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 1999

Keywords

  • Basal shear stress
  • Deforming bed
  • Ice-sheet reconstruction
  • Late Devensian
  • Meltwater channels

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